Patient Experience
I'd been to a couple of doctors about this constant fatigue and weird stomach ache. Everyone said it was stress. Dr. Champawat actually listened to the whole, messy story, asked a bunch of questions the others hadn't, and ordered some specific tests. Turns out it was a tricky thyroid issue masking something else. He explained it all with a diagram on his notepad—no fancy jargon. Felt like someone finally put the puzzle together.
Had to get a minor cyst removed. Honestly, I was more nervous about the hospital process than the cut itself. Dr. Champawat's team had it down to a science. In and out the same morning. The procedure itself was so quick I barely registered it. He checked in the next day himself, which was a nice touch. Sometimes simple things going right is all you need.
The Apollo waiting area was packed, I won't lie. But from the front desk to the nurses, everyone was calm and actually helpful. One nurse saw I was looking lost and walked me to the lab. When I finally saw Dr. Champawat, he was completely focused, not rushed. The whole place just felt competent, which makes a big difference when you're worried.
Look, I'm not great with doctors. I get awkward. But Dr. Champawat has this quiet way of talking that just puts you at ease. He doesn't fill the silence with chatter; he lets you think. When he explained my treatment plan, he looked at me, not the computer, and asked if I had any doubts—really meant it. Felt like talking to a very smart, calm friend who knows medicine.